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In Helsinki English a more straightforward approach would be used: Neither the two dogs nor the cat received their food tonight. In case anyone insisted on including the pointless underlined words in the original post, a possessive apostrophe
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Hi,
in the sentance the ladies heel fell off her shoe where does the apostrophe go
The lady's heel fell off her shoe.
Clive
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in the sentance the ladies heel fell off her shoe where does the apostrophe go
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Thank you Mister Micawber; this is very helpful. Mr G
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Inanimate things rarely take the 's possessive. This is the correct form: The importance of the decision kept the management team up all night.
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The decisions importance (or decision's importance) kept the management team up all night. Which approach is correct?
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It is not correct to place the apostrophe after the s, according to this link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostrophe
And I agree, 'each other' refer to the singular of each individual.
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No apostrophe is needed as got is a verb. The title is ungrammatical or informal - whichever word you prefer. In correct English: The Lakes Have Got Talent. CB
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Hi there. We are doing a talent show in an area called "The Lakes" and we are calling it "The Lakes Got Talent." Should we use an apostrophe? If so where should it be places? Thank you for the help.
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The second one is a correct variant of the first. No problem. Note, however, that it's That's , with an apostrophe. CJ
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